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Behavioral Health

Behavioral health describes the connection between a person’s behaviors and the health and well-being of the body and mind. Behavioral health is a vital component of overall health and wellness. Raising awareness and reducing stigma around mental health and substance is key to building a resilient and thriving community. The vision is to ensure that all Linn-Benton-Lincoln residents have equitable access to behavioral health support and treatments.

The long-term vision of these goals is to ensure that all Linn-Benton-Lincoln residents have equitable access to behavioral health support and treatments.

Goals

  • Use a person-centered, culturally responsive, and trauma-informed approach to behavioral health promotion and destigmatization through education, communication, and engagement. Read more
  • Increase access to responsive, transformative behavioral health services and supports that are culturally and linguistically appropriate. Read more
  • Develop and improve a comprehensive continuum of care that integrates regional behavioral health systems and community-based organizations (CBOs) using a person-centered and community-focused approach. Read more
Close-up of psychiatrist hands in those of patient

Goal 1: Build community resilience

Community resilience is the ability of a community to adapt and maintain their well-being when faced with hardship. This goal uses education, communication, and engagement to destigmatize behavioral health and promote resilience. Three key characteristics of these strategies are: 

  • person-centered—care that focuses on a person and their needs and circumstances, instead of a condition, disability, or bias (prejudice or prejudgment) that may be present
  • culturally responsive—understanding and adapting to a person’s culture
  • trauma-informed—care that recognizes the impact of trauma (an event that causes intense stress and has a lasting effect) on a person’s life and well-being

Goal 1 strategies

  1. Connect physical, emotional, and social health and well-being by supporting individual and community tools that promote resilience and healthy coping.
  2. Encourage help-seeking by reducing barriers to access through outreach to specific populations (e.g., youth, veterans, tribal, and others) 
  3. Create population-specific educational resources that increase community awareness of existing behavioral health services and destigmatize behavioral health and wellness.

Goal 2: Grow a healthy workforce

This goal focuses on increasing access to behavioral health services and support for the people who serve the community. This goal identifies four aspects of healthy workers: 

  • Responsive—the ability to understand and adapt as needed 
  • Transformative—making a lasting, positive change 
  • Culturally appropriate—respecting and responding to a person’s cultural heritage, which can include ethnicity or religion 
  • Linguistically appropriate—respecting and responding to a person’s need to interact in their language

Goal 2 strategies

  1. Grow and maintain a healthy behavioral health provider workforce by addressing retention strategies, burnout, and recruitment. Example: For retention and recruitment, support career development opportunities such as internships, mentorships, and culturally specific peer supports.
  2. Reduce barriers to access to care including the physical barriers of transportation, rural and tribal needs, and culturally appropriate and gender-affirming treatment options.
  3. Create learning opportunities for providers that increase awareness around cultural competence and the unique behavioral health needs of communities that have been economically and socially marginalized.

Goal 3: Improve care coordination

This goal focuses first on the need to develop a continuum of care, a system of services that meet the varying needs of people throughout their lifespan. A comprehensive continuum of care means that all people can receive the right care at the right time from the right provider.

This goal focuses on two types of approaches: 

  1. Person-centered—care that focuses on a person and their needs and circumstances, instead of a condition, disability, or bias (prejudice or prejudgment) that may be present
  2. Community-focused—care that centers on the needs, environment, and circumstances of a community

Goal 3 strategies

  1. Create spaces to engage in collaborative discussions for relationship-building across systems.
  2. Identify and address insurance barriers to behavioral healthcare access.
  3. Streamline the client experience across organizations by establishing a flexible data collection and communication system adaptable to different organizational requirements, limitations, and needs.

What we’re measuring:

We’re evaluating access to mental health and substance use services, workforce capacity, and efforts to reduce stigma and improve outcomes for all residents.

Why it matters:

Improving behavioral health services and destigmatizing mental health care are essential to fostering resilient and thriving communities.

News and updates

  • Crisis Centers to Open Across IHN-CCO Service Territory

    InterCommunity Health Network (IHN-CCO) has partnered with public health agencies in Linn, Benton, and Lincoln counties over the past three years to establish 24/7 crisis centers in all three counties. These centers are places where anyone can walk in and get the help they need—whether it’s temporary respite or referral to other providers. The Benton County Crisis Center will open this spring. Centers in Linn and Lincoln counties are expected to open in early 2026. Todd Jeter, Associate Vice President of Health Equity and Member Advocacy for IHN-CCO, said the crisis centers are part of an “acute care continuum,” along with efforts to…

    Read more

  • Health Care Workforce Committee to host educational webinar

    Webinar from the Oregon Health Authority on Wednesday, June 11 Description: This educational webinar will provide an overview of the Surgeon General’s framework for Mental Health and wellbeing in the Workplace.  It presents an everyday decision-making tool that can aid leaders at levels in health and social service organizations in understanding how everyday decision can drive wellness and reduce burnout, key elements of staff retention and patient safety and quality.  Presenters: Lisa Ladendorff, LCSW, Northeast Oregon Network (NEON), Edna Murrieta, MS.Ed, Northeast Oregon Network (NEON) For more information, please visit the Health Care Workforce Committee’s website at https://www.oregon.gov/oha/hpa/hp-hcw/pages/index.aspx.

    Read more

  • Benton County Launches Deflection Program

    News from the Benton County Board of Commissioners Benton County launched its Deflection Program one day ahead of the planned start date, when the first person in Benton County was offered deflection on Dec. 31, 2024. The new program provides treatment and support services as an option to the court system for qualifying County residents cited for drug possession.  Benton County’s Behavioral Health Deflection Program is designed to align with the Oregon Behavioral Health Deflection Grant Program, set up by House Bill (HB) 4002. HB 4002 awards grants to counties and tribes to fund deflection programs. According to the bill, a…

    Read more

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Key Progress measures:

  • Increase in the number of behavioral health providers per capita.
  • Reduction in the rates of deaths related to substance use and untreated mental health conditions.
  • Enhanced community awareness and use of behavioral health resources, especially among youth and marginalized populations
Logo for Partnership for Community Health of Linn, Benton, and Lincoln Counties
  • About
    • Contact Us
    • About the PCH
  • Priorities
    • Access to Affordable Housing
    • Access to Quality Care
    • Behavioral Health
    • Inclusion, Diversity, Anti-Racism, and Equity (IDARE)
  • News & Events
  • Grants & Funding
    • Delivery System Transformation Pilots
    • Continuum of Care HUD Funding
    • Statewide Shelter Program, Linn County
    • HRSA Funding Opportunities
    • OCF Community Grants
    • Roundhouse Foundation Grants
    • OHA School-linked Mobile and Telehealth Access Grant
  • Reports & Data

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